Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Berlusconi: "The communists used to exist and judges close to eliminate"

"The Communists are, if you go there, and I want to do away with the help of prosecutors." It said today Silvio Berlusconi, Italian Prime Minister in a telephone interview with a television program that has served as the beginning of the political. Berlusconi has used a tone between lively and fierce, that seems to predict that the hypothesis of an early election is closer than it has admitted publicly in recent days.

The journalist who interviewed him, Alfonso Signorini, is the director of the gossip magazine Chi (published by Mondadori, Berlusconi's publishing group.) Signorini screen showed a photo of Massimo D'Alema, leader of the Democratic Party's shadow, on vacation with his wife in Saint Moritz, and Berlusconi has asked if the Communists still exist, because people like D'Alema, a former Communist, spends his days off in Saint Moritz and wears cashmere clothing.

Berlusconi responded: "The cashmere can not change the brain and heart of people. Our post-communist pretending to have come from Mars and say they have never been Communists, but still mystify reality as they always have, by demonizing the enemy, are trying to eliminate it as me, using a close judges because I consider an obstacle that must be removed to gain power.

" "The Italian Communists have thought that would suffice to change the name of the game to erase the past," he added. "They've changed the name several times but the trick did not work because they are always the same, have the same prejudices and ways of doing politics. It is true that have been gentrified, signed now wear suits, custom shoes, eat caviar and champagne, but they are always the same.

" And to question the presenter on where the Communists have ended, Berlusconi replied: "Before I went to the houses of the village, now frequent the chic salons, but have not lost the habit of slandering an opponent to remove as they do me." Berlusconi's first show in 2011 ended with a joke about his amorous adventures.

The presenter asked if he ever had an affair with a woman on the left, and Berlusconi has broached: "Never, I can swear it!". "But his wife (Veronica Lario) has become an icon on the left," he insisted Signorini. "I abstain on this issue," concluded Berlusconi. The attack on the opposition and judges Berlusconi reveals the concern of the imminent decision of the Constitutional Court, which decided on 11 of the law of legitimate impediment, allowing the prime minister not to be tried while he is the head of government.

The first leaks indicate that the high court might opt for a Solomonic solution, leaving the judges of each process to establish whether the Berlusconi government jobs actually prevent him from going to court. Berlusconi is currently three cases pending, the Mills case, the case and the case Mediatrade Mediaset.

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